As we approach Congo Week, October 16-22, this year I hear Pete Seeger singing the “The Bells of Rimney”, the haunting call to rally around the cause of Irish independence : “Oh what will you give me say the sad bells of Rimney?”

“Oh, what will you give me ? say the sad drums of Congo.” The drumming of the question becomes more pointed and focused the third week of October each year during “Congo Week”.

During this year’s “Congo Week” we have the opportunity to share with others the “Crisis in Congo”, an excellent film summarizing the origins of the agony of Congo today. The 27 minute film can be downloaded for viewing by your church, community organization, family and friends at this web address:

Go to http://www.globalministries.org/ and express appreciation for their (Disciples and U.C.C.) sponsorship of Congo Week. They are the only U.S. Protestant mission board to do so as of now.

Mark the web site of http://www.friendsofthecongo.org/ as among your favorites and learn more about Congo’s history and potential from the lead organizers of Congo Week. Consider inviting them to speak at a university or church gathering in your area.

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[Times of Zambia] The German government has pledged to contribute more than K8 million (700, 000 Euros) towards the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) refugee response in Zambia and Angola in 2018.

[UN News] New Year could bring more misery to children in DR Congo's restive Kasai region, warns UNICEF In the coming year, severe acute malnutrition could claim the lives of more than 400,000 children under the age of five in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's volatile Kasai region, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) warned Tuesd […]

[PR Newswire] Brussels -Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Didier Reynders and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Development Cooperation Alexander De Croo express their satisfaction with the conclusions adopted today by the Foreign Affairs Council of the European Union regarding the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

On Thursday evening, a UN military base on the banks of the Semuliki river in northeastern Congo was attacked. According to initial news reports and conversations with Congolese army (FARDC) and MONUSCO officials, the attackers were wearing FARDC uniforms and attacked a small FARDC platoon next to the base before entering the

Human Rights Watch and the Congo Research Group launched the Kivu Security Tracker today. The joint project will monitor the worst violence in North and South Kivu provinces through maps, graphs, and analytical reports. According to initial results from the Tracker, from June to November 2017, at least 525 civilians were killed

As the tanks rolled down the streets of Harare this week, Congolese social media lit up. President Kabila was rumored to be panicking to see one of his stalwart allies depart. Congolese and foreign observers hoped that Mugabe departure could somehow provide inspiration for Kabila to leave, as well. The person

By ELISABETH CAESENS and JASON STEARNS There will be flurry of diplomatic activity on the Congo in coming days. Tomorrow (Thursday), the International Contact Group for the Great Lakes Region––a conclave of important donors and diplomats––will meet in The Hague to discuss, among other things, what to do about the

By CHRISTOPH VOGEL On the afternoon of 15 September 2017, the Congolese border town Kamanyola witnessed the deadliest massacre in South Kivu’s Ruzizi Plains since 2014’s Mutarule carnage. At least 36 Burundian refugees and two Congolese (a soldier and a policeman) were killed in what seemed a spontaneous outbreak of violence,